Social Influence

    Cards (55)

    • Jenness (1932)

      1. Procedure - 101 male and female psychology students made private, independent estimations of the number of white beans in a jar
      2. Findings - Individuals' second private estimation moved closer to the group estimation
      3. Conclusions - Provides strong evidence for internalisation and informational social influence
    • Jenness AO3 - Limitation: Low ecological validity

      Findings cannot be generalised to real-life settings
    • Jenness AO3 - Limitation: Lack of informed consent
      Participants did not experience their right to be made fully aware of the research aims, procedures and anticipated findings
    • Jenness AO3 - Limitation: Low population validity

      Findings cannot be generalised to wider populations
    • Jenness AO3 - Limitation: Deception
      Participants were misled by the procedure of the study
    • Asch (1951)

      1. Procedure - 123 American male student volunteer participants were tested in groups, with only one being a genuine participant and the others being confederates
      2. Findings - Participants conformed in 36.8% of critical trials
      3. Conclusions - Provides strong evidence for compliance and normative social influence
    • Asch AO3 - Limitation: Affected by time period

      Conformity is not consistent over time and setting, more likely if the perceived costs of not conforming are high
    • Asch AO3 - Limitation: Demand characteristics

      Participants are likely to perceive the demands of the study, decreasing internal validity
    • Asch AO3 - Limitation: Low population validity

      Findings only apply to certain groups, lowering external validity
    • Asch AO3 - Limitation: Deception
      Participants were misled by the procedure of the study
    • Explanations for conformity AO3 - Strength of two-process model

      Strong research to support it, showing participants conform due to informational social influence or normative social influence
    • Explanations for conformity AO3 - Limitation of two-process model

      Individual differences affect conformity, desire to be liked explains conformity in some people more than others
    • Explanations for conformity AO3 - Further limitation of two-process model

      Overly simplistic, often both informational and normative social influence are involved
    • Variables affecting conformity - Group size
      Conformity rates increased as the group size increased due to more social influence
    • Variables affecting conformity - Supportive confederate

      Social influence experienced by the participant was reduced when the supportive confederate gave the correct answer
    • Variables affecting conformity - Task ambiguity

      Participants experienced both informational and normative social influence, effectively doubling the social influence and increasing conformity
    • Zimbardo
      1. Procedure - 24 male student participants were randomly allocated to the role of prisoner or guard, and went through a process of experiencing deindividuation
      2. Findings - Both prisoners and guards quickly conformed to their social roles
    • Zimbardo's prison experiment

      • Participants were emotionally stable and without a criminal history
      • Guards and prisoners went through a process of experiencing deindividuation as they were given clothing and experiences that removed their personal identity
      • Guards wore uniforms, mirrored sunglasses and carried truncheons
      • Prisoners were 'arrested', stripped-searched and dressed in degrading smock uniforms
      • Prisoners were referred to by a number; not by their names and had 16 rules to follow which were enforced by the guards
      • Guards were instructed to keep prisoners under control without using physical violence
      • Guards had complete power over the prisoners, even deciding when they could go to the toilet
      • Zimbardo acted as the Head of the Prison, giving direction to the guards and managing prisoners
      • The observation was planned to run for 14 days
    • Obedience
      Compliance with the orders of an authority figure, even when those orders conflict with personal moral standards
    • Authoritarian personality
      Childhood experience gives them a strong respect for authority, which makes them more likely to obey
    • Obedient participants in Milgram's experiment
      Scored more highly on the F-scale than those who were less obedient
    • Obedient participants reported having a good relationship with their parents rather than them being overly strict
    • There is a difference between having strict parents and having an authoritarian personality, suggesting one does not necessarily cause the other
    • The F-scale is politically biased and measures tendency towards right wing ideology
    • Extreme right wing and left wing philosophies have a lot in common, and both insist on complete obedience to political authority
    • Adorno's theory is not a complete explanation for obedience to authority, as it does not explain obedience to left-wing authoritarianism
    • The F-scale can only establish a correlation, it is not possible to conclude that having an authoritarian personality causes high levels of obedience
    • Less educated people are more consistently authoritarian and were more likely to obey to higher levels in Milgram's research
    • Education could be an important factor that explains both authoritarianism and obedience
    • The F-scale has low internal validity as the scale may simply measure participants' tendency to agree
    • Researchers knew the participants' scores before follow up interviews, which may have unintentionally biased the data
    • The research evidence and therefore Authoritarianism may not be a valid explanation of obedience
    • Milgram's variations - what happened to the obedience rate?

      • Dropped to 40%
      • Dropped to 30%
      • Dropped to 20.5%
      • Dropped to 47.5%
      • Dropped to 20%
    • Locus of control

      The extent to which individuals believe they can control events that affect them
    • Participants with an internal locus of control

      37% did not continue to the highest shock level, compared to 23% of externals
    • People have become more independent but also more external over time, challenging the link between internal locus of control and resistance to social influence
    • Locus of control is only important in new situations, it has little influence in familiar situations where our previous experiences are more important
    • Social support

      The presence of another person who is not conforming allows an individual to be free of group pressure
    • 88% of participants rebelled when working in groups to produce evidence for a smear campaign, showing that support from peers is linked to greater resistance to obedience
    • Moscovici's procedure

      1. Female participants recruited, placed in groups of 6 with 4 genuine participants and 2 confederates, shown blue slides and asked to state the colour
      2. Consistent minority condition - confederates called all slides green
      3. Inconsistent minority condition - confederates called 24/36 slides green
      4. Control condition - no confederates
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